Beliefs persist less because they are true than because they provide the transient continuity of narrative as semantic coherence.
Beliefs persist less because they are true than because they provide the transient continuity of narrative as semantic coherence.
Disinformation is not the opposite of information, but one of the ways communication organises uncertainty into meaning. Its deeper structure belongs less to politics than to the philosophical problem of how truth, coherence, and identity emerge at all.
Holism begins from a simple observation: nothing exists alone. Every person, institution, technology, economy, ecosystem, and belief system exists through relations that extend beyond itself. The individual matters. The wider field matters too. Much of human conflict emerges when we mistake local interests for universal ones, forgetting the dependencies that make those interests possible in […]
This is how a system built to produce knowledge becomes a system for reproducing the conditions under which its existing knowledge remains authoritative.
Power does not erase wisdom’s serial warnings about the corruption and cruelty that often accompanies extreme wealth; it orchestrates and sustains an institutional matrix to demonstrate why the warning applies to someone else.
A system can become so effective at measuring, managing, and reproducing its own internal assumptions that it gradually loses the ability to perceive the external reality those assumptions were originally created to address.
Technology at scale preferentially industrialises the parts of human nature that are easiest to measure, repeat, monetise, automate, and weaponise. Those parts are rarely our best ones.
The internet did not die; it was embalmed alive, taught to imitate its own pulse, and released back into the world as an infinite machine for converting human meaning into synthetic residue.
Corruption is not what happens when a healthy system breaks; it is what emerges when enough incentives, privileges, dependencies, and concentrations of power quietly align, turning private advantage into public infrastructure.
The history of technology amplifies existing social, cultural and psychological dynamics around competitive thought and behaviour.
The deeper question of our historical moment concerns whether large-scale communication systems can remain sustainably coherent while continuously generating the uncertainty upon which their own operation depends.
When organisations confuse confidence with competence, wealth with wisdom, and power with understanding, incompetence is no longer simply a failure of leadership but becomes one of its preferred production methods.